Anderson, Thomas. Three Essays on the Social, Economic, and Demographic Causes and Consequences of Low Fertility. Ph.D. Dissertation, Department of Demography, University of Pennsylvania, 2015.

Bernardi, Fabrizio and Diederik Boertien. “Do Parental Separation and Single Motherhood Strengthen Intergenerational Inequality in Educational Attainment? A Decomposition Analysis for Germany, Italy, the UK and the US.” Family and Societies Working Paper Series 45, European Union’s Seventh Framework Programme, 2015.

Connolly, Eric J. and Kevin M. Beaver. “Assessing the Salience of Gene-Environment Interplay in the Development of Anger, Family Conflict, and Physical Violence: A Biosocial Test of General Strain Theory.” Journal of Criminal Justice 43,6 (November-December 2015): 487-497.

Garcia-Manglano, Javier. “Opting Out and Leaning In: The Life Course Employment Profiles of Early Baby Boom Women in the United States.” Demography 52,6 (December 2015): 1961-1993.

Glass, Jennifer L., Sharon Sassler, Yael Levitte and Katherine Michelmore. “What’s So Special about STEM? A Comparison of Women’s Retention in STEM and Professional Occupations.” Social Forces 92,2 (2013): 723-756.

Goldberg, Julia S. The Long Reach of Families: Family Structure History, Parental Support, and the Reproduction of Inequality in Young Adulthood. Ph.D. Dissertation, Department of Sociology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, 2015.

Headen, Irene. Associations Between Long- and Short-Term Exposure to Neighborhood Social Context and Pregnancy-Related Weight Gain. Ph.D. Dissertation, Department of Epidemiology, University of California, Berkeley, 2015.

Jacobs, Josephine C., Courtney H. Van Houtven, Audrey Laporte and Peter C. Coyte. “Baby Boomer Caregivers in the Workforce: Do They Fare Better or Worse than their Predecessors?” The Journal of the Economics of Ageing 6 (December 2015): 89-202.

Kelly, Brian and Mike Vuolo. “Marijuana Use Trajectories from Adolescence to Young Adulthood: Social and Occupational Outcomes.” Presented: Dublin, Ireland, Society for Longitudinal and Life Course Studies (SLLS) International Conference, October 2015.

Lambert, Susan and Julia Henly. “Measuring Precarious Work Schedules.” Working Paper, The Employment Instability, Family Well-being, and Social Policy Network (EINet), University of Chicago, November 2014.

Lin, Tin-Chi, T.K. Courtney, David A. Lombardi and S.K. Verma. “Association Between Sedentary Work and BMI in a U.S. National Longitudinal Survey.” American Journal of Preventive Medicine 49,6 (December 2015): e117-e123.

Looze, Jessica. The Effects of Children, Job Changes, and Employment Interruptions on Women’s Wages. Ph.D. Dissertation, Department of Sociology, University of Massachusetts-Amherst, 2015.

McNamee, Catherine. “White and Latino Remarriage Differences in the United States: A Case for Moving beyond the Catholic Assumption.” Presented: Dublin, Ireland, Society for Longitudinal and Life Course Studies (SLLS) International Conference, October 2015.